Method and scope of this report

 

Method

Over the course of 6 months between November 2016 and April 2017, the Health Foundation and NHS Providers sought the views and experience of individuals across all types of NHS trusts that are directly involved in, or affected by, the current payment system. This took the form of three workshops and 18 in-depth telephone interviews with people working in the provider sector. In total, 73 people were involved: 12 clinicians, 14 staff in strategic and operational roles, and 47 staff working in contracting or finance. They represented 39 acute trusts, 12 mental health trusts, four community trusts, and two ambulance trusts. Many of the individuals brought years of experience through careers at multiple organisations.

Analysis of discussions from these workshops and interviews was performed using the web-based qualitative analysis software Dedoose. It resulted in a preliminary set of principles for designing and implementing payment systems. These were then tested with an additional 20 NHS staff in a scenario-based workshop, at which the draft principles were mapped against the strategic aims of the provider sector, to ensure they were relevant and applicable. Further refinement following this workshop led to the development of the final eight principles outlined in this report.

Scope

The eight principles reflect the expressed needs of those working in the NHS provider sector. They were asked what a reformed payment system should take into account, and how it could support them in providing quality care in appropriate settings. They were not asked what it should look like – this report does not attempt to outline an ideal payment system.

Acute trusts were slightly over-represented in the sample (39 out of 57 trusts were acute). They made up 68% of the sample, whereas 58% of all NHS trusts in England are acute trusts. However, the principles were tested with – and found to be applicable to – staff from across the range of trust types. The principles underpinning a payment system – unlike the specific payment mechanisms employed – should not vary depending on the type of care delivered.

This report does not capture the views of the whole system: it focuses on the views of NHS trusts providing services to patients. It reflects these views for the benefit of NHS England and NHS Improvement – which share responsibility for the current system – as they consider and reform the payment system for the benefit of providers, commissioners and patients.

The principles are the result of rigorous qualitative analysis, and are closely interlinked. The authors recognise that, consequently, some themes recur across them.

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